exactly alike
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī B ā NW ú è R, meaning exactly the same, there is no difference. From journey to the West.
The origin of Idioms
Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty wrote in his 35th chapter: "even though it's made from a single vine, it's different in size, but it's not the same. How can it be the same?"
Idiom usage
It means exactly the same. A journey to the west by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty chapter 71: strange! Strange! How can his bell be the same as mine! Lin Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 2 of "the surprise of making a case at the first moment": "those who make mischief again, have different ways, and have no interference, suddenly have the same idea of life, and pretend to be true." Zhao Danian's "the princess's daughter" 6: "her dress is the same as other female soldiers, but she is slightly different from others in temperament." Ming Ling Mengchu's "two moment clapping a case in surprise" Volume 4: "the next day I went to the street to observe and listen, in twos and threes, there was no difference."
exactly alike
touch gold and turn it into iron -- miscorrect a piece of writing - diǎn jīn chéng tiě
Heaven and man learn from each other - tiān rén gòng jiàn
you must correct your own fault when you know it - zhī guò bì gǎi